The Hindu (Kochi)

WHEN MEGHALAYA

- Sanjukta Sharma

The best documentar­y photograph­ers can make sounds and smells come alive in their frames. Anurag Banerjee, 32, is an eloquent cultural chronicler, and his latest book, The Songs of Our People, is a visual cornucopia of sounds.

A Shillong boy, the Mumbai-based photograph­er grew up listening to Meghalaya’s diverse musical traditions — from indigenous stories to rock, reggae and rap. The book chronicles his State’s musicians, and how their music re›ects identities, histories, grief as well as hope and the power of community and belonging.

Made with a grant from Meghalaya Age Limited, an initiative by the state government to support and mobilise projects about the State’s culture and society, Banerjee’s choice to shoot, write and produce this book arose out of a desire to know his home state better. “In the years I have spent outside Shillong, the …rst comment that people would make upon …nding out where I was from would invariably revolve around music,” he says. So, when he wanted to immerse himself in the place he knew as home, he chose to do so through Shillong’s musicians — who sing in English as well as a variety of local dialects such as Khasi, Garo and Pnar.

Shillong beyond its Bob Dylan fandom

“The idea for the book coincided with people across the country taking to the streets at the end of 2019 for what has now come to be known as ‘the citizenshi­p protests’. Since genres like hip-hop and R&B have their roots in protest and people’s movements, I gravitated to the same in my hometown,” Banerjee says. It took him eight months to …nish the many photshoots, and he wrote the book over the next few years.

Banerjee covers a swathe of musicians with a similar dedication to Meghalaya’s creative language and identity. He hung out with them at gigs, practice and even in their homes, before choosing 19 (curated on the basis of access and individual points of view) for the book.

Not knowing the local dialects well was a limitation, but employing translator­s helped. And while he agrees the representa­tion of artistes isn’t exhaustive, he sees “this as a …rst of many books” — the subsequent volumes including more musicians and stories from culturally-rich Meghalaya.

The selected musicians illuminate not only musical talent, but also a staggering diversity of voices, stories and genres — Maya Lyngdoh’s love for her roots, Banrap Lyngdoh’s investigat­ions of grief, and Praiseley Lyngskor’s faith in the redemptive powers of community.

This is Shillong beyond Bob Dylan fandom, its legends like Lou Majaw and its only mainstream culture entrant, the Shillong Chamber Choir. This is musical Meghalaya at its most earthy and sublime.

The self-published book, priced at ₹799, is yet to be o‡cially launched. It can be ordered through Banerjee’s Instagram (@banrjee.anurag).

The writer and critic is based in Mumbai.

 ?? (ANURAG BANERJEE) ?? (Clockwise from left) Meghalayan band Ka Sur Na Nongkyndon­g; Banrap Lyngdoh; Katta Nisa, a musician from the Garo tribe; and Nangsan Lyngwa, frontman of Plague Throat.
(ANURAG BANERJEE) (Clockwise from left) Meghalayan band Ka Sur Na Nongkyndon­g; Banrap Lyngdoh; Katta Nisa, a musician from the Garo tribe; and Nangsan Lyngwa, frontman of Plague Throat.
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